A Trophic Cascade Initiated by an Invasive Vertebrate Alters the Structure of Native Reptile Communities

A Trophic Cascade Initiated by an Invasive Vertebrate Alters the Structure of Native Reptile Communities

View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Epsilon Open Archive Received: 11 October 2019 | Revised: 16 December 2019 | Accepted: 4 February 2020 DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15032 PRIMARY RESEARCH ARTICLE A trophic cascade initiated by an invasive vertebrate alters the structure of native reptile communities Benjamin Feit1 | Tim Dempster2 | Tim S. Jessop3 | Jonathan K. Webb4 | Mike Letnic5,6 1Department of Ecology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden Abstract 2School of Biosciences, University of Invasive vertebrates are frequently reported to have catastrophic effects on the Melbourne, Melbourne, Vic., Australia populations of species which they directly impact. It follows then, that if invaders 3Centre for Integrative Ecology, School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Deakin exert strong suppressive effects on some species then other species will indirectly University, Burwood, Vic., Australia benefit due to ecological release from interactions with directly impacted species. 4 School of Life Sciences, University of However, evidence that invasive vertebrates trigger such trophic cascades and alter Technology Sydney, Broadway, NSW, Australia community structure in terrestrial ecosystems remains rare. Here, we ask how the 5Centre for Ecosystem Science, School cane toad, a vertebrate invader that is toxic to many of Australia's vertebrate preda- of BEES, University of New South Wales, tors, influences lizard assemblages in a semi-arid rangeland. In our study area, the Sydney, NSW, Australia 6Evolution and Ecology Research Centre, density of cane toads is influenced by the availability of water accessible to toads. We School of BEES, University of New South compared an index of the abundance of sand goannas, a large predatory lizard that Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia is susceptible to poisoning by cane toads and the abundances of four lizard families Correspondence preyed upon by goannas (skinks, pygopods, agamid lizards and geckos) in areas where Benjamin Feit, Department of Ecology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, cane toads were common or rare. Consistent with the idea that suppression of sand 750 07 Uppsala, Sweden. goannas by cane toads initiates a trophic cascade, goanna activity was lower and Email: [email protected] small lizards were more abundant where toads were common. The hypothesis that Funding information suppression of sand goannas by cane toads triggers a trophic cascade was further The Hermon Slade Foundation; Mazda Foundation supported by our findings that small terrestrial lizards that are frequently preyed upon by goannas were more affected by toad abundance than arboreal geckos, which are rarely consumed by goannas. Furthermore, the abundance of at least one genus of terrestrial skinks benefitted from allogenic ecosystem engineering by goannas where toads were rare. Overall, our study provides evidence that the invasion of ecosystems by non-native species can have important effects on the structure and integrity of native communities extending beyond their often most obvious and fre- quently documented direct ecological effects. KEYWORDS cane toad, direct effects, indirect effects, invasive species, Rhinella marina, semi-arid, trophic cascade, Varanus gouldii This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes. © 2020 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd Glob Change Biol. 2020;26:2829–2840. wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/gcb | 2829 2830 | FEIT et AL. 1 | INTRODUCTION a potent combination of toxic chemicals as a defence against pred- ators that is not found in native Australian anurans (Lever, 2001). The invasion of ecosystems by non-native species is a key driver Because Australian carnivores have not evolved to cope with the of global environmental change in the Anthropocene (Vitousek, toxins present in toads, many species are highly susceptible to D’Antonio, Loope, Rejmanek, & Westbrooks, 1997). Over recent fatal toxic ingestion (Phillips, Brown, & Shine, 2003; Shine, 2010). centuries, the frequency at which human actions facilitated the Consequently, poisoning of predators which attempt to consume movement of species into habitat outside their natural range has cane toads has driven sharp declines in the abundances of predators markedly increased and there is no reversal of this trend in sight as such as quolls, varanid lizards, freshwater crocodiles and snakes fol- our globalized economy continues to open new pathways for invad- lowing the toad invasion (Feit & Letnic, 2015; Shine, 2010). ers to reach distant ecosystems (Seebens et al., 2017). The unprec- Recent studies have demonstrated that this toad-induced de- edented rate of species introductions into new environments has cline of native predators can translate into increased abundances far-reaching consequences, including the homogenization of biota of their prey. However, a limitation of these studies is their focus (Clavel, Julliard, & Devictor, 2011), disruptions to ecosystem func- on either individual prey species (Doody et al., 2006, 2009, 2013, tioning (Sousa, Morais, Dias, & Antunes, 2011; Walsh, Carpenter, & 2015) or entire taxa (Feit et al., 2018), without investigating further Vander Zanden, 2016) and impacts on human well-being and the consequences for the richness and composition of native species economy (Bacher et al., 2018; Pyšek & Richardson, 2010). Yet, for communities that might arise from differences in the strength of in- more than 60 years since Elton's seminal book laid foundation to the direct effects initiated by the toad-induced predator decline. Such field of invasion biology (Elton, 1958), disentangling the multitude differences can occur when predators favour certain prey over of mechanisms through which non-native species can affect eco- others. Under these circumstances, the magnitude of predatory re- systems still remains one of the great challenges in modern ecology. lease is likely to vary between prey groups. Here, we addressed this In contrast to the considerable attention that has been payed question by investigating the effects of cane toads on the structure to the causes of invasions (Galil et al., 2016; Jeschke & Strayer, and composition of small lizard communities following a decline in 2005; Van Kleunen, Dawson, Schlaepfer, Jeschke, & Fischer, varanid lizard populations in semi-arid regions of their range. 2010) and their immediate consequences via direct interactions The establishment of high-density populations of cane toads in with native biota (Corbin & D’Antonio, 2004; Miller & Gorchov, semi-arid ecosystems has been facilitated by access to permanent 2004; Risbey, Calver, Short, Bradley, & Wright, 2000; Roy et al., sources of surface water at artificial water points (AWP), created 2012), the potential cascading effects that invaders have on spe- by pastoralists to provide water for livestock (Florance et al., 2011; cies they do not directly interact with are less well described. Letnic, Webb, Jessop, Florance, & Dempster, 2014). Most commonly, Nevertheless, mounting evidence indicates that invasive species AWP consist of earthen dam reservoirs into which groundwater is have the potential to substantially alter the entire structure of pumped. Toads can readily access the water stored in earthen dams native communities through cascades of indirect effects that go for the purposes of rehydration and reproduction (Florance et al., beyond their direct impacts on individual species (Doody et al., 2011; Letnic et al., 2014; Figure 1a,b). In some areas, AWP consist 2015; Feit et al., 2018; Mooney & Cleland, 2001; White, Wilson, of plastic or steel storage tanks from which water is made acces- & Clarke, 2006). Such cascades can be particularly prominent in sible to livestock by transfer into an elevated trough (Figure 1c). In systems where invaders affect the abundance or performance this set-up, cane toads neither have access to the water stored in of strongly interactive keystone species such as predators, pol- tanks nor troughs. Nevertheless, a small number of toads can still linators or ecosystem engineers (Anderson & Rosemond, 2007; be found around tanks, where they survive on the moisture seeping Feit et al., 2018; Gooden, French, & Turner, 2009; Letnic, Koch, from small cracks or leaks at pipeline joints (Feit, Dempster, Gibb, Gordon, Crowther, & Dickman, 2009). In such circumstances, in- & Letnic, 2015). However, AWP fitted with tanks do not allow cane vaders can propagate series of direct and indirect effects whereby toads to establish high-density populations, as standing water is not shifts in the abundance of immediately affected species subse- available for reproduction (Feit et al., 2015). quently alter the abundance and biomass of others (Terborgh & In our study area, the rangelands of the Tanami Desert in Estes, 2010). For example, such cascades have been documented Australia's Northern Territory, pastoralists have installed open for invaders in both aquatic(e.g. Simon & Townsend, 2003; Strayer, access AWP and closed access AWP. This set-up created the op- 2010) and terrestrial ecosystems (Croll, Maron, Danner, & Byrd, portunity to conduct a large-scale natural experiment to examine 2003; Doody, Castellano, Rhind, & Green, 2013; Feit et al., 2018; direct and indirect consequences

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